Members

Sharpening Woodturning Tools - Should You Hone Your Edges?

Among the great questions in woodturning gets the equipment sharp enough to work well. Sharpening a woodturning tool is distinctive from the sharpening of all other tools in the workshop, but sharp edges are needless to say a must. While many of the edges in the woodworker's arsenal are best sharpened to a blade edge and honed to ultimate cutting, wood turning tools seldom need this level of sharpness.

Typically, woodturners use some of the very awkward woods at our disposal. A number of them have high silica content in the sap and very quickly dull the edges of the tools. Others have the bark still intact along with grit acquired in the felling of the tree best klutch tools. This serves as little grindstones against the edge of the equipment, quickly dulling the edges. Still other woods contain the knots that numerous cabinet makers will cut around while woodturners tend to think of them as character marks in the wood. Actually, burls, which woodturners use while other woodworkers tend in order to avoid them, are many times an accumulation of knots and bark inclusions. All these hit an advantage with enough force to quickly dull it.

Enhance the preceding elements the speed of a lathe and the volume of wood that passes within the edge of a wood lathe tool in place of that that is cut with a hand tool this kind of wood plane and it's quickly perceived that a honed edge won't last extended at the wood lathe. Actually most woodturners will move from the grinder to the wood. This allows for achieving an advantage that is effective enough to acquire a good cut while lasting for a fair timeframe considering the time and effort given to getting the edge in the first place.

However, this is not to disparage the beauty of a cut from a well sharpened and honed tool. For the ultimate cuts prior to sanding it may stand a turner in good stead to hone the edge for the cleanest shaving and remaining surface. In this instance it must be remembered that the edge will have to be rehoned and perhaps reground and rehoned often for the cuts to be effective. As in most things about woodturning, experience is the better teacher.

It's often said in woodturning that there is never one way to get the ultimate result but that most ways are valid. In some cases honing is advisable but the majority of the time the edge from the grinder is more that sufficient.

Views: 2

Comment

You need to be a member of On Feet Nation to add comments!

Join On Feet Nation

© 2024   Created by PH the vintage.   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service